Misplaced Pages

Unconditional Love (2003 film)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Unconditional Love (TV)) For the 2002 American comedy film directed by P.J. Hogan, see Unconditional Love (2002 film). For other uses, see Unconditional love (disambiguation).

2003 British TV series or programme
Unconditional Love
GenreCrime drama
Written byChris Lang
Directed byFerdinand Fairfax
StarringRobson Green
Joe Absolom
Sarah Parish
Timothy Krause
Kaye Wragg
Peter Capaldi
Shaun Parkes
Howard Ward
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes1
Production
Executive producersSteve Christian
George Faber
Sandra Jobling
Charles Pattinson
ProducersMark Pybus
Bill Shephard
EditorSteve Singleton
Running time120 minutes
Production companiesCoastal Productions
Company Pictures
Original release
NetworkITV
Release20 January 2003 (2003-01-20)

Unconditional Love is a one-off British crime drama television film that was broadcast on 20 January 2003. Written by Chris Lang, the production starred Robson Green, Joe Absolom, Sarah Parish and Timothy Krause, and follows the story of a couple whose four-year-old son is kidnapped, and his captor demands that they commit a series of crimes in order to secure his safe return. The drama was directed by Ferdinand Fairfax and produced by Mark Pybus.

Plot

Pete (Robson Green) & Lydia Gray (Sarah Parish) are out celebrating their son Max (Timothy Krause)'s fourth birthday, when they become involved in one of every parent's worst nightmares; as Max is snatched by embittered Benjamin Cain (Joe Absolom), his half-brother, who since his birth in 1982, has endured various degrees of abuse, perversion, abandonment, addiction and betrayal. He now has concocted a plan to gain revenge on his abusers and his so-called loving birth parent, who gave him up for adoption, leaving him to the mercy of those who exploited the system, just so they could abuse their positions of power and indulge in their perverted pleasures of pedophilia.

Cast

References

  1. Smith, Rupert (21 January 2003). "TV review: A hard bargain". The Guardian.
  2. "Unconditional Love".

External links

Categories: